Science Friday - What Are The Best Practices For Prostate Cancer Screening?
Episode Date: June 17, 2025Last month, former President Joe Biden announced that he had been diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer. The news sparked a larger conversation about what exactly the best practices are... to screen for prostate cancer. Turns out, it’s more complicated than it might seem. Host Ira Flatow is joined by oncologist Matthew Cooperberg and statistician Andrew Vickers, who studies prostate cancer screening, to help unpack those complexities.Guests:Dr. Matthew Cooperberg is a urologic oncologist and professor at the University of California, San Francisco.Dr. Andrew Vickers is a statistician who studies the efficacy of prostate cancer screening at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center based in New York City.Transcripts for each episode are available within 1-3 days at sciencefriday.com. Subscribe to this podcast. Plus, to stay updated on all things science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters.
Transcript
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Hi, this is Ira Flato, and you're listening to Science Friday.
What's the best way to screen for prostate cancer?
The reality is that PSA is probably the best screening test in the history of oncology if it is used well.
And the problem and the controversy all relate to how it gets used.
Former President Joe Biden was diagnosed with an aggressive form of prostate cancer a few weeks ago.
The cancer had already spread to the bone.
The news got a lot of people, including myself, thinking, how did his doctors not catch that cancer sooner?
And what exactly are the best practices for screening for prostate cancer?
Turns out it's a bit more complicated than it might seem on the surface.
Prostate cancer is a world filled with confusing advice for diagnosis and treatment of patients.
So we're going to try to sort through it.
And joining me now to help unpack those complexities are my guests.
Dr. Matthew Cooperberg, urologic oncologist and professor at the University of California,
San Francisco, and Dr. Andrew Vickers, a statistician who studies prostate cancer screening
at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center here in New York.
Welcome to Science Friday, both of you.
Glad to be here.
Good to be here.
Nice to have you.
Dr. Cooperberg, let me start with you.
Let's start by going over some basics about prostate cancer.
cancer screening. Many people are familiar with the famous PSA test. Tell us exactly what it measures and what
it means. Sure. So PSA stands for prostate specific antigen. It is a protein made by the prostate
gland, a small portion of which gets out into the bloodstream, and we can measure that, and it's an
indicator of what's going on in the prostate. Now, it's prostate specific, not prostate cancer-specific,
and other things that affect the prostate can raise the PSA.
And that issue is kind of what gets to the heart of the controversy.
The reality is that PSA is probably the best screening test in the history of oncology
if it is used well.
And the problem and the controversy all relate to how it gets used.
As men age, the PSA will tend to drift up because other things happen to the prostate.
Most commonly, it grows, a phenomenon called BPH or benign prostateic hyperplasia.
which happens to almost all men to some extent as they get older.
And that means as men get older, interpreting the PSA in terms of its prediction for prostate cancer,
which is the main use for the test, gets more difficult.
So just to reiterate, it's not detecting prostate cancer, it's just assessing a risk factor for it.
Correct.
PSA is a first screening test.
It does not diagnose prostate cancer.
People who have an elevated PSA need to think about secondary testing.
In the old days, that would mean a biopsy.
Today, we have MRI and eight different urine and blood tests that we use to figure out who
is actually at risk of having a higher grade prostate cancer that might actually need treatment.
Yeah, we'll talk about that a little more in detail.
I want to get some more background information first.
We should actually do a little background on prostate cancer itself.
Yeah, so prostate cancer is exceptionally common.
It is by far the most common cancer diagnosed among men in the U.S.
and one of the most common worldwide.
It is the second leading cause of cancer death among men in the U.S.
But the problem is that we use the term prostate cancer
for an exceptionally broad spectrum of things that can happen to a prostate
as a man gets older.
We can find cells that look like cancer under the microscope in half of all men.
This is obviously not cancer the way we think about cancer.
This is a pathologic anomaly, something that looks strange under the microscope.
That is not what we are seeking to diagnose.
Proste cancer that we intend to screen is the more aggressive version, the more aggressive
subtypes of cancer.
And we are much better able today than we were 20 years ago to distinguish the aggressive
and non-aggressive.
Those of us that are trying to say we shouldn't even call it low-grade ones cancer because
it has basically no capacity to spread.
And the controversy around PSA testing over the years has related to the fact that in the
course of trying to find the aggressive ones, we also find a lot of non-aggressive prostate tumors,
and those historically have been treated aggressively with surgery and radiation therapy,
and the side effects of those treatments are a large part of what led to the recommendations in 2012
that mentioned stop screening. This was from the U.S. Preventative Services Task Force,
which is the National Guidelines Panel, which is the one that has the most influence with primary
care providers. So that was a mistake then. A lot of us would say,
that was a mistake. That was, and that came from, on the one hand, a desire to reduce the harms of
over-detection and over-treatment. On the other hand, it also came from a misinterpretation of the
evidence base in several very important ways. So Dr. Vickers, can you give us some overview of the
current screening guidelines for prostate cancer? You Matt made a very important point,
which is for many decades, right? We were doing PSA screening wrong, and when a lot of
these guideline bodies said stop PSA screening. What they really meant is stop doing it wrong.
And many of us would say, yeah, you should stop doing it wrong, but you should start doing it right.
And in the past five to ten years, there has been a quite remarkable consensus amongst
academics who study prostate cancer on the right ways to screen. And like so many things,
it's easier to say what you shouldn't do than exactly what you should do. Or to start with that.
If we're going to screen, we shouldn't be screening older men. In most countries of the world, the most common decade that men get a PSA test is in their 80s.
Even 70s is often, for most men, they should not be getting PSA tests in their 70s. The key years to be screened is sort of 45 to 70.
Let me stop you right there and ask you why that is. Why should these older people not be screened?
Because prostate cancer is a very slow-growing disease.
And so if a man in their 40s or 50s or 60s is diagnosed with prostate cancer through a PSA test,
there is a good chance that that is going to eventually grow to threaten his health or his life.
But if you find prostate cancer through a PSA test in a man in the 80s,
the chances are that he will let out the course of his natural life and never, ever,
know that he had prostate cancer absence the PSA test. Or even if he does become aware, it would be
discovered at a time where treatment would not be appropriate for him due to his age.
So was Joe Biden's diagnosis and discovery, I should say, a rarity at his age?
Let's be very clear about what we do and we don't know about Joe Biden's diagnosis.
What we've heard is that he had a PSA in his early 70s. We haven't heard what the level of the
PSA was. Now, there is a nuance here. Most of the recommendations, including the ones that my
hospital, MSK, users, say stop screening at the age of 70. But still screening does not
main stop taking your PSA test. If your PSA is elevated when you're 70, that should continue to be
monitored. We don't consider that screening. We consider that follow-up of an abnormal test. Now, it's quite
possible, and if this happens routinely actually, is that doctors here stop screening at 70,
and they interpret that as stop taking a PSA.
Yeah, that's the confusing point.
There's a difference between getting the test and screening, you're saying.
Right, exactly, yes.
What we don't know in Joe Biden's case is whether his doctor followed the recommendations
of most academic societies, which was to continue to get PSA screening if his PSA was elevated
or in fact his PSA was not elevated in his early 70s,
and he unfortunately had a very rapidly growing cancer,
the sword that really can't be detected by screening.
We do have these cases where men have cancers that become very aggressive,
very quickly, and no screening test is ever going to detect them.
And that's true of all cancers.
It's true of breast cancer.
A woman has a mammogram, and then a few months later turns up with a very aggressive
breast cancer. Dr. Guberberg, there are different types of prostate cancer, and as you've said
before, you've advocated to not call the less aggressive form of prostate cancer cancer at all.
I want you to explain that a little bit more, please.
And this gets philosophical, but it's an important philosophical question. You know, the reality is you
have to, we have to step back and recognize that the word cancer literally goes back to Hippocrates in
ancient Greece for literally millennia.
A cancer was something that you found because you either saw it on the surface of the body
or it caused terrible symptoms, and it was almost invariably incurable.
And it was only in the last 150 years that we've started looking under the microscope
and defining things that happened to the body according to what they look like at the microscopic
level.
It's only in the last couple decades that we are now in this screening era where because
somebody has an elevated PSA, that we give tissue to a pathologist from somebody who had absolutely
no symptoms. And the pathologist says, well, this looks like the same cancer that we diagnosed a few
decades ago when somebody took an organ out of the body. So we've completely changed the nature
of the cancer diagnosis in medical circles. We've gone from a diagnosis which is primarily
made clinically to a diagnosis which is primarily made by a pathologist. And society has
in no way caught up with that trend. So, you know, many of us have been advocating for literally
decades now that we should not be over treating what was crossy cancer, that we should be doing
active surveillance, and trying to educate the public in terms of, you know, what the word
cancer means and doesn't mean. But the reality is that word still has this incredibly deep resonance
and somebody hears prostate cancer. And even though we spend the next 20 minutes talking about how this
is low grade and non-threatening, they're thinking about their neighbor that they just saw died of
pancreatic cancer or their cousin that just died of a bad prostate cancer. So,
you know, the word has a lot of implications.
People have to pay more for life insurance, for health insurance.
We do a lot of potential harm with that diagnosis when we know that the low-grade prostate
cancers have absolutely no capacity to spread, if it's a pure what we call grade group 1.
Now, some of them can get worse over time.
And in some cases where we find a grade group 1, there is also higher-grade cancer somewhere else
in the prostate.
So all of us that are discussing this changing the name question, everybody would say,
we absolutely still need to follow this, meaning we follow the PSA over time,
meaning we do serial imaging, we repeat biopsies, et cetera.
So if and when we find evidence that the cancer is getting worse,
we are still well within the window of opportunity to cure it.
And that window we measure in years or even in decades.
After the break, why black men develop prostate cancer at higher rates than men of other races.
The trajectory of prostate cancer is actually relatively similar between white and black men
from the point of diagnosis forward, but the whole thing appears to start about five years earlier.
Stay with us. I want to talk a bit about racial disparities in prostate cancer. Black men much more
likely to develop than men of any other race? Do we know why exactly that is? So we have to be
very careful about the use of the word disparity, because let's start talking about differences.
We know that there is a difference in the incidence of prostate cancer for every hundred
white Americans that get prostate cancer, about 170 black Americans will get prostate cancer.
And for every hundred white Americans who die of prostate cancer, over 200, about 210
Black Americans will die of prostate cancer.
Now, the best evidence is that the difference in incidence, the fact that more black men
get prostate cancer than white men, is due to genetic changes that are complex.
in men from West Africa, which is where most black Americans come from because of the slave trade.
But because there's a difference between 1.7 and 2.1, once you were diagnosed with prostate cancer,
you are more likely to die of it if you were a black man. It's very well known that that is due to
differences in care. When white and black men receive care at the same institutions in the same
setting, they have very similar outcomes. But across the country, they receive care in different
settings, black men get poorer care and they die as a result. So the disparity is in care. The cause of the
difference in incidence is predominantly due to genetics. I would say I agree with a lot of that.
I think it is more nuanced. But there are also structural social determinants of health,
which have been pretty tightly associated not with cancer mortality, but with diagnosis of high
risk disease. So these are things like access to diet, proximity to areas of environmental
contamination, chronic stressors, these sorts of things, which interact with genetic factors in
ways that are really complicated. Now, what we know is that the trajectory of prostate cancer is actually
relatively similar between white and black men from the point of diagnosis forward, but the whole
thing appears to start about five years earlier. So the screening recommendations from everybody
except the OSP preventive Services Task Force now recommend starting to screen five.
years earlier for black men or men with other risk factors of family history, which means starting
around age 40. And this is from the American Marital Law Association, from the American Cancer Society.
The point about outcomes after diagnosis, it actually depends a lot on which literature you look at.
There are some high levels or social level studies suggesting worst outcomes after diagnosis.
Black men are more likely to be diagnosed with a high grade, higher stage, higher PSA prostate cancer.
But once you adjust for all those things, and the more you know about the cancer,
Mr. Race tends to drop out of these models.
We've covered a lot of ground here and very interesting stuff.
I'm going to try to see if we can sum this up by asking if you have any final words of
advice for men listening at home in their car, wherever they are, who feel overwhelmed by
making these choices of when to screen and what their results might mean for their health.
What is the general take-home message here?
So if a man is interested in PSA testing, there's just a, of course,
actually a very few things that you need to know. One is that it can save your life. The second
thing is it can do more harm than good if you don't do it right. And there are a couple of things
to think about. First off, if you are not comfortable hearing the word cancer and watching it,
right, that means waking up every morning knowing you have cancer and it hasn't been treated,
PSA screening is probably not for you. It's probably going to cause more harm than good.
if you understand that many of the prostate cancers were going to find are low risk and probably
shouldn't even be called cancer, then you should think about getting a PSA test.
PSA testing is for men between the ages of 45 to 75. If you're older than 75 and haven't
had an elevated PSA test or any symptoms, do not get a PSA test. What would you be considered
an elevated test for, let's say, somebody over 75? Typically above three. If you do have a PSA above three,
do not get a biopsy without a very good reason.
And that generally is going to be a secondary test, such as an MRI or a second blood or urine marker.
And if you are diagnosed with cancer, do not get that treated aggressively with surgery or radiotherapy
unless it is aggressive.
All right.
And I have one last question which I thought of.
Do the cutbacks in NIH funding for cancer research have any effect on your kinds of work?
The cuts that have been proposed both in the last few months and are proposed in the upcoming
budget will be catastrophic does not begin to define how severe this will be for health care
across the country around the world. The reason President Biden has a very promising prognosis,
frankly, is due directly the fundamental research funded by the NIH, funded by the DOD,
by the CDC, by other federal agencies over the last 20 years. Every new treatment that we
have for cancer, for Alzheimer's disease. You name a condition where things are better now than they
were 20 years ago, it is directly because of fundamental research conducted by NIH.
Deaths from prostate cancer have fallen by about half. Half as many men are dying of prostate
cancer now than they were dying 40 years ago. And that's because of cancer research
through the National Institutes of Health. If the current government doesn't want cancer death
rates to keep falling, then they're doing the right thing by canceling the research. But I think most
of people in America who know people who have suffered from cancer actually wants cancer death
rates to keep falling and need to keep funding appropriate cancer research, which has a proven
track record in improving cancer outcomes. Well, I want to thank both of you for taking time to
speak with us about this really interesting and important topic. Dr. Matthew Cooperberg,
Urologic oncologist and professor at the University of California, San Francisco, and Dr. Andrew Vickers, a statistician who studies prostate cancer screening at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center based in New York.
Thank you both.
Thank you.
That's about all the time we have for now.
A lot of people help make this show happen.
Shoshana Bucksbaum.
Beth Rami.
Danielle Johnson.
Jackie Hirschfeld.
I'm Ira Flato.
Thanks for listening.
Thank you.
